Watch The Interview

Video 1

Video 2

Video 3

Family Photos

Betty Good Nolan, speaking with BOHP's Eric Bryant on October 7, 2024.

Betty Good with sisters Marilyn and Joyce in front of first house in Selkirk, early 1950s.

Agnes Merges, Cathedral Academy, Albany, NY, senior photo, 1932.

Betty Good Nolan & Marilyn Good Stangle

Selkirk, NY

1947 & 1944

Interviewed at Betty’s residence on October 7, 2024, by Eric Bryant w/ Bill Ketzer & Tim Beebe present.

Betty and Marilyn are the daughters of vegetable, nursery and row crop farmers John R. Good (1916-1970) and Agnes Mary Magdeline Merges Good (1915-1998), who moved from the City of Albany to Bethlehem in 1951. In that era, Selkirk (and any part of town outside Bethlehem’s Tri-Village area) was still a straight-cut rural community. They grew vegetables, fruit and Christmas trees for local markets throughout the 1950s and well into the 1960s.

John’s parents were Polish (his given surname was “Gudz”) and came to NYC in 1912 from Austria, prior to World War One resolving border disputes between Poland & Austria. By 1925 John’s father was working for the New York Central Railroad at Selkirk Yard, and the family had relocated to Clarksville to farm while he and his siblings were still fairly young.  After John and Agnes were married in 1942, the couple settled in Albany’s South End and set up their truck farm operation on rented land along River Road in Glenmont. Originally settled by the Van Wie family, the Vincentian Fathers established Our Lady of Angels Seminary on the site in 1961, and is currently the home of Glenmont Job Corps.

The youngest of five siblings, Agnes grew up in the South End with her parents George (1874-1941) and Margaret (1876-1967). They were first generation New Yorkers, with both families coming to the United States around 1866, at a time when many Germans emigrated to the U.S. to escape poverty and political uncertainty in their homeland. George was one of nine children and was a grocer for many years. The family attended the Our Lady Help of Christians church on 2nd Avenue, which purchased land in Glenmont for its cemetery in 1874.

After graduating from Mildred Elly Business School during the Depression, Agnes worked for National Commercial Bank & Trust Company, breaking ground as the first female teller in the bank’s 250-year history. After more than 15 years in that role, raising a family and owning a farm, she eventually transitioned into real estate in both Bethlehem and Coeymans, building a reputation that would last a lifetime. She kept her married name to coin her creative “A. Good Realty” calling card and also managed her own appreciable portfolio of land holdings. In addition, she was far ahead of the curve on renewable energy, as the owner of the first privately-funded solar home in New York State in 1983.

It’s no surprise that Agnes’s daughters inherited her forward-thinking mindset and applied it to preserving the legacy of their family farm. In November 2024, the Town of Bethlehem’s Farms & Forests Conservation Program entered into a partnership with the sisters to protect a 68-acre portion of their property near the intersection of Maple Avenue and Beaver Dam Road in Selkirk.

Their goal was to ensure that the fields and woodlands of their family farm – maintained and enjoyed for over 70 years – remain undeveloped and accessible to the public, with walking trails and wildlife viewing areas in the offing. This vision appealed to town leaders, who in the past six years alone have helped conserve more than 600 acres of open space within town borders.

This partnership/collaboration includes not only the Town of Bethlehem, but also the Mohawk Hudson Land Conservancy, Selkirk Fire Department, and the nearby Albertus W. Becker Elementary School, where there is another connection to the family. Betty’s daughter, Debra Neubart attended Becker as a child, and recently retired from the school after serving as its principal for 7-8 years.

We hope you like hearing the recollections of these two long-time Selkirk sisters as they walk us through the life and times of their family. Enjoy!

Editor’s Note: The video footage on this page was shot on location at Betty’s home, which abuts the new town preserve. Marilyn, who now lives in South Bethlehem in a beautiful 19th century farmhouse, agreed to appear with her sister but respectfully declined to be filmed. So you’ll hear her weighing in from the margins with memories of her own.

Family Photos

John and Agnes M. Good wedding reception, Merges family home at 266 2nd Avenue in Albany, October 12, 1942. Bridal party breakfast held at Hotel Wellington, ceremony at Our Lady Help of Christians Church.

A young John Good with a cooperative extension associate, early 1930s. Location unknown but likely Clarksville.

Good family house, corner of Route 9W and Maple Avenue, 1958.

Bethlehem town supervisor David VanLuven and other public officials join Good family members to celebrate the conservation of their farmland as open space, November 12, 2024.

Betty with sister Marilyn Good Stangle and Town of Bethlehem's open space coordinator Lauren Chiyoko-Axford, November 12, 2024.

John Richard Good (1916-1970) and Agnes Mary Magdalene Merges (1915-1998). Location unknown, 1942.